logo
NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Saturday, July 19

NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Saturday, July 19

Forbes18-07-2025
Connections hints and answers are here.
Looking for Friday's NYT Connections hints, clues and answers instead? You can find them here:
Time to begin the weekend with some Connections, and there is one group today that I think is borderline impossible to get on its own.
How to Play Connections
Connections is the second-most popular NYT Games puzzle game outside of the main crossword itself, and an extremely fun, free offering that will get your brain moving every day. Play it right here.
The goal is to take a group of 16 words and find links between four pairs of four of them. They could be specific categories of terms, or they could be little world puzzles where words may come before or after them you need to figure out. And they get more complicated from there.
There is only one set of right answers for this, and you only get a certain number of tries so you can't just spam around until you find something. There are difficulty tiers coded by color, which will usually go from yellow, blue/green to purple as difficulty increases, so know that going in and when you start linking them together.
You pick the four words you think are linked and either you will get a solve and a lit up row that shows you how you were connected. If you're close, it will tell you that you're one away. Again, four mistakes you lose, but if you want to know the answers without failing, either come here, or delete your web cookies and try again. If you want to play more puzzles, you can get an NYT Games subscription to access the full archives of all past puzzles. So, onto the hints and answers:
FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™
Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase
Pinpoint By Linkedin
Guess The Category
Queens By Linkedin
Crown Each Region
Crossclimb By Linkedin
Unlock A Trivia Ladder
What Are Today's Connections Hints?
These are the hints that are laid out on the puzzle board itself, but after that, we will get into spoiler territory with some hints and eventually the answers.
The hints for the Connections groups today are:
What Are Today's Connections Groups?
Alright, the full spoilers follow here as we get into what the groups are today:
What Are Today's Connections Answers?
The full-on answers are below for each group, finally inserting the four words in each category. Spoilers follow if you do not want to get this far. The Connections answers are:
Okay there was one easy clue, one sort of hard one, one pretty hard one and one I would consider bordering impossible.
Green group was easy if you watch or play any football at all. I guess some people may forget that 'spike' is a football move, but yes, it can be pretty important to strategic play.
Yellow group was doable if you could at least get three of these. I knew that some of these were water sources but I sort of forgot that 'tap' was one of them. I mean, tap water, of course, but it didn't occur to me at the time.
Blue group - I did get nail, pin and tack pretty easily. Brad? I don't know what a brad is, and I was trying to find some sort of clue related to Brad Pitt. Needless to say, that did not go well. Looking up 'brad' I now know what it is, but I literally never knew those things were called that.
Purple group? Oh come on. I have seen roughly 100 Ninja Turtles episodes plus all the movies growing up, and this still would have never occured to me. Don and Leo maybe, but Mic and Rap? When those may go together for a music-based clue? This was impossible.
Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram.
Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Returning after a six-week break, the 'Real Time' host had a bit of catching up to do.
Returning after a six-week break, the 'Real Time' host had a bit of catching up to do.

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Returning after a six-week break, the 'Real Time' host had a bit of catching up to do.

Following a six-week break, Bill Maher returned to Real Time with guns blazing as he tore into President Donald Trump's first six months in office. Dismissing frivolities like renaming the Gulf of Mexico and changing Coca-Cola's recipe, Maher said there are 'only so many f---s to give' when it comes to current events. Instead, he focused his ire on stories that matter in his current scorecard for Trump's administration during his 'New Rules' segment. 'Turning the Environmental Protection Agency into the Pollution Protection Agency, yes, that's going to matter,' Maher said. 'All the people who will lose healthcare and all the death that will be run up from the Big, Beautiful Bill, yes, that matters.'

Jeannie Seely, Country Hitmaker of the '60s and '70s and 58-Year Mainstay of the Grand Ole Opry, Dies at 85
Jeannie Seely, Country Hitmaker of the '60s and '70s and 58-Year Mainstay of the Grand Ole Opry, Dies at 85

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jeannie Seely, Country Hitmaker of the '60s and '70s and 58-Year Mainstay of the Grand Ole Opry, Dies at 85

Jeannie Seely, a country star of the '60s and '70s who had been a favorite of Grand Ole Opry audiences from her induction in 1967 up until the present day, died Friday at age 85. Seely last performed on the Opry on Feb. 22 of this year — her 5,397th Opry performances, which surpassed the number for any other performer in the history of the century-old live broadcast. Not just on the Opry, but generally speaking, Seely was considered to be the oldest regularly working female country singer. (Among all ongoing Opry stars, Bill Anderson still had a couple of years on her; he is 87.) More from Variety 'Opry 100: A Live Celebration': The Country Music Special's Best Moments 'The Masked Singer' Reveals Identity of Griffin: Here Is the Celebrity Under the Costume 'Opry 100' Producers Tell What to Expect From Country Music's Superstars in the Three-Hour NBC Telecast Beyond the Opry, Seely was a familiar name to younger generations of country fans as the host of a weekly SiriusXM program that had run on the Willie's Roadhouse channel since 2018. Her publicist reported Seely died at 5 p.m. CT at Summit Medical Center in Hermitage, Tennessee, due complications from an intestinal infection. Although she continued to perform on the Opry through February of this year, she had recently suffered from multiple health issues, which this year included two emergency abdominal surgeries and multiple back surgeries. Dolly Parton was among the stars quickly weighing in with thoughts about Seely's passing. 'I have known Jeanie Seely since we were early on in Nashville,' Parton wrote in a message on Instagram. 'She was one of my dearest friends. I think she was one of the greater singers in Nashville and she had a wonderful sense of humor. We had many wonderful laughs together, cried over certain things together and she will be missed.' Sunny Sweeney, one of the younger-generation country traditionalists who revered Seely, spoke about learning about the death while playing the Opry Friday night. 'Tonight I played the Opry for the 77th time for the release of my new album that came out today,' Sweeney wrote on Instagram. 'I was set up in Jeannie Seely's dressing room and had a 4:40 p.m. rehearsal. My rehearsal got moved to 5:40 at the last minute so I was sitting in her room, where I've spent so many nights with her and Gene [her late husband] over the years, when she passed on across town at 5:00 pm. I can't explain what that coincidence will mean to me for the rest of my life. I will miss you forever, my friend… and I promise to carry your torch with pride forever. I loved you hard and knowing you was one of the greatest honors of my life… I cried on stage and I know she was rolling her eyes at me, telling me to not mess up my eye makeup.' In 2021, Variety profiled Seely's history with the Opry, visiting her backstage at the Opry House just prior to the show's 5,000th broadcast. 'Jeannie Seely is living proof that, in country music circles, it's possible to get hipper as you get older,' the article began. She talked then about what it was like to hang with the late Little Jimmy Dickens in the dressing room we were meeting in. 'I'd had had some vocal issues because I have some esophagus issues, and I went to him and I said, 'What do you do?' He said, 'Lower the keys and tell more bullshit.'' She told Variety that Dickens influenced the tone of her act. 'In my early years, I remember there was like Eddie Arnold, who was always a serious singer, and then there'd be a comedian. But it was Jimmy Dickens that was the first one that made me realize that you can do both — be a serious singer and also be funny — and that's what I wanted to do.' Seely's first major hit was 1966's 'Don't Touch Me,' which reached No. 2 on the Billboard country chart. (It also became her lone Hot 100 entry, peaking there at No. 85. She reached the country top 10 twice more as a solo artist, with 'I'll Love You (More Than You Need)' (No. 10 in 1967) and 'Can I Sleep in Your Arms' (No. 6 in 1973), and once as the duet partner of Jack Greene, with 'Wish I Didn't Have to Miss You' (No. 2 in 1969). Her other top 20 hits included 'It's Only Love,' 'A Wanderin' Man,' 'Much Oblige,' 'What Has Gone Wrong With Our World' (the latter two with Greene) and 'Lucky Ladies.' Her run of charting singles lasted through 1977, though she continued to release new albums as recently as 2020's 'An American Classic,' which included collaborations with Willie Nelson, Vince Gill, Lorrie Morgan, Waylon Payne and others. She won her sole Grammy for 'Don't Touch Me' in the Best Country & Western Recording category in 1967. Seeley earned two additional Grammy nods in subsequent years. A Pennsylvania native, Seely spent time in Los Angeles working at a bank and then as a secretary for Liberty/Imperial Records before moving to Nashville in 1965 with $50 in her pocket. Her first husband, legendary songwriter Hank Cochran, gave her a leg up when the rejections came fast and furious. 'I had met Hank Cochran in California, as I had Dottie West and Justin Tubb. They kind of opened some doors,' she said in an interview with Classic Bands. 'Hank took one of my demo tapes to several of the places. Then later, eventually, including Fred Foster at Monument, Hank was so frustrated by it. I remember he took me into Monument, into Fred's office about 5:30 one evening when everybody else was leaving the office. He handed me a guitar and said, 'Now sit there and sing until Fred signs you.' I always laughed later. I said I don't know whatever Fred finally heard something in that little session or whether he was just hungry and wanted to go to dinner and said, 'Okay, okay, whatever.' But thank goodness he did. He just said, 'Okay. I hear what you're hearing. Let's find some songs and we'll go ahead and record.'' Seely encountered no small amount of sexism along the way. There was even a level of patronizing embedded when she was complimented by no less a public figure than President Richard Nixon, who watcher her in his visit to the Opry in 1974 and said, 'Some girls have looks but can't sing. Others can sing but don't have looks. Jeannie Seely's got them both.' There was a glass ceiling at the Opry for many years of her tenure there. 'One of the things I have a lot of pride in is the fast that the doors are finally open for women to host. That was a door a lot of people don't realize in the newer generation, that those doors were not only slammed shut and locked, they were sealed against women; that was a door that I beat on constantly trying to get them to change that. I remember when Mr. Durham was the manager, I used to go to him all the time and I'd say, 'Okay, I know you've told me before why it is women can't host the Opry, but I forget,' and he'd say, 'It's tradition Jeannie,' and I said, 'Oh, that's right, it's tradition, it just smells like discrimination.' Things turned around, though, with a change of administration. 'I was very aware though that when Bob Whitaker came on as manager and he opened the doors and allowed me especially to do that, I knew that I had to do my homework, I knew I had to pay attention, I had to do it right or the door would be slammed again, not only on me but on a lot of them comin' behind me.' Seely told Variety in 2021 that she never told the Opry no when they invited her to perform. 'If the phone rings and I see it's Dan (Rogers), I never say 'Hello.' I just say, 'Yes.'' At the Opry, she said, there was little generation gap. 'I try to always impress this on young artists that didn't grow up on the Opry: It is not a normal concert venue. It's not a normal show. There's usually three generations represented on this stage, and you'll see three generations in the audience, you don't see that anywhere else. At sporting things, there might be in the crowd, but not on the field, you know? So I think that's one thing that makes the Opry so unique.' Saturday night's edition of the Grand Ole Opry will be dedicated to Seely. Seely's husband, Gene Ward, died in December. Her three siblings also preceded her in death. She did not have any children, but there was a big asterisk on that, as she explained in an interview with Country Stars Central. 'I didn't give birth to any children, but I had three stepsons when I was married with Hank Cochran and helped raise three stepsons there,' she said, 'and I helped raise two of Jack Greene's sons because I was the only one there. So, I have had a little experience, but the grandbabies are all a new experience for me. It's funny; I was talking to somebody the other day and she said, 'I found out what people meant when they said that if I'd had known grandchildren were so great, I would have just had them and skipped the children.' I said, 'Well, actually that's what I did.'' Among other testimonials, Sarah Trahern, CEO of the Country Music Association, said, 'While I've had the privilege of working with Jeannie Seely over the past 25 years, my immediate grief is deeply personal. Early in my tenure at CMA, I shared unforgettable lunches with Jeannie and Jo Walker Meador, full of stories that were occasionally irreverent but always fascinating. Jeannie was at the very first Fan Fair with Jack Greene and remained a beloved fixture for decades. She once told me a hilarious story about switching credentials with Dottie West just to keep people on their toes. When the CMA Board honored her with the Joe Talbot Award in 2023, it was for more than her music and fan relationships — it was for her spark. She mentored countless artists, especially women, and while they learned from her confidence and wit, she reminded us she was learning from them too. That humility was part of her magic.' Asked then what she hoped she would be remembered for, Seeley said, 'Well, I hope that people will remember me as being a good person, number one, and I hope that they will remember me with a smile. I hope that I have made people laugh, I hope that will be a good memory for everybody and I hope they will remember that, number one, I was still and still am a fan. I never stopped being a fan of country music and certainly never stopped being in awe of the Grand Ole Opry. I hope that they'll remember that I was just one of them; I just sang and wrote songs for a living.' Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025 What's Coming to Netflix in August 2025

Wordle hints today for #1,505: Clues and answer for Saturday, August 2
Wordle hints today for #1,505: Clues and answer for Saturday, August 2

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wordle hints today for #1,505: Clues and answer for Saturday, August 2

Hey, there! If you're looking for some help with today's Wordle, you've come to the right place. Here's our daily Wordle guide with some hints and the answer for Saturday's puzzle (#1,505). It may be that you're a Wordle newcomer and you're not completely sure how to play the game. We're here to help with that too. What is Wordle? Wordle is a deceptively simple daily word game that first emerged in 2021. There is one five-letter word to deduce every day by process of elimination. The daily word is the same for everyone. Wordle blew up in popularity in late 2021 after creator Josh Wardle made it easy for players to share an emoji-based grid with their friends and followers that detailed how they fared each day. The game's success spurred dozens of clones across a swathe of categories and formats. The New York Times purchased Wordle in early 2022 for an undisclosed sum. The publication said that players collectively played Wordle 5.3 billion times in 2024. So, it's little surprise that Wordle is one of the best online games and puzzles you can play daily. How to play Wordle To start playing Wordle, you simply need to enter one five-letter word. The game will tell you how close you are to that day's secret word by highlighting letters that are in the correct position in green. Letters that appear in the word but aren't in the right spot will be highlighted in yellow. If you guess any letters that are not in the secret word, the game will gray those out on the virtual keyboard. However, you can still use those letters in subsequent guesses. You'll only have six guesses to find each day's word, though you still can use grayed-out letters to help narrow things down. It's also worth remembering that letters can appear in the secret word more than once. Wordle is free to play on the NYT's website and apps, as well as on Meta Quest headsets and Discord. The game refreshes at midnight local time. If you log into a New York Times account, you can track your stats, including the all-important win streak. How to play Wordle more than once a day If you have a NYT subscription that includes full access to the publication's games, you don't have to stop after a single round of Wordle. You'll have access to an archive of more than 1,500 previous Wordle games. So if you're a relative newcomer, you'll be able to go back and catch up on previous editions. In addition, paid NYT Games members have access to a tool called the Wordle Bot. This can tell you how well you performed at each day's game. Previous Wordle answers Before today's Wordle hints, here are the answers to recent puzzles that you may have missed: Yesterday's Wordle answer for Friday, August 1 — BANJO Thursday, July 31 — FRILL Wednesday, July 30 — ASSAY Tuesday, July 29 — OMEGA Monday, July 28 — SAVVY Today's Wordle hints explained Every day, we'll try to make Wordle a little easier for you. First, we'll offer a hint that describes the meaning of the word or how it might be used in a phrase or sentence. We'll also tell you if there are any double (or even triple) letters in the word. In case you still haven't quite figured it out by that point, we'll then provide the first letter of the word. Those who are still stumped after that can continue on to find out the answer for today's Wordle. This should go without saying, but make sure to scroll slowly. Spoilers are ahead. Today's Wordle help Here is a hint for today's Wordle answer: Cause someone else to feel nervous, apprehensive or intimidated. Are there any double letters in today's Wordle? There are no repeated letters in today's Wordle answer. What's the first letter of today's Wordle? The first letter of today's Wordle answer is D. The Wordle answer today This is your final warning before we reveal today's Wordle answer. No take-backs. Don't blame us if you happen to scroll too far and accidentally spoil the game for yourself. What is today's Wordle? Today's Wordle answer is... DAUNT Not to worry if you didn't figure out today's Wordle word. If you made it this far down the page, hopefully you at least kept your streak going. And, hey: there's always another game tomorrow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store